The Baking of Eggs


I think Im posting this partly just to remind myself just how amazing Eggs in Pots are, and to stop my brain from picturing them as miserable, grey 1970s-cookbook fare. Baking eggs is so satisfying, especially if you refer to them by their flirtatious French name: oefs en cocotte.Ive never posted a recipe here before (Im a little nervous about it, to be honest) but Eggs in Pots just happens to fit quite perfectly with my most unexpected post-America aim: to eat small plates of food. There were so many amazing places to eat in New York that I often felt as though I needed to fit a whole lifetime of eating into a month; eating smaller things, more often, in lots of different places, seemed to solve the problem. Im trying to keep it going now that Im back in large-dinnered England, and these are so easy that even I can make them.So, these eggs. If I could just make myself remember how incredibly tasty they are, Id eat them all the time: for a weekend lunch, brunch, or just a small-plate kind of dinner. Baked Eggs in Pots for two (adapted from Stephane Renauds Ripailles and Rachel Khoos Little Paris Kitchen.What you Need:150ml (approx.) crème fraîche2 eggschorizo (optional)parsleysaltpepper1. Heat the oven to 180ºC (350ºF). 2. Put a dessert spoonful of crème fraîche into each of your ramekins and season with salt and pepper.3. Break an egg into the ramekin, and cover with another dessert spoon of crème fraîche. 4. Chop some chorizo and parsley (as much as you like) and sprinkle on top. 5. Place the ramekins in a tray of boiled water (making sure that the water cant get into the pots) and put the tray in the oven for 12-15 minutes. Serve with slices of buttery toast, and youre away!
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